5 research outputs found

    Parameterization of 3D Surface Patches by Straightest Distances

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    Abstract. In this paper, we introduce a new piecewise linear parameterization of 3D surface patches which provides a basis for texture mapping, morphing, remeshing, and geometry imaging. To lower distortion when flatting a 3D surface patch, we propose a new method to locally calculate straightest distances with cutting planes. Our new and simple technique demonstrates competitive results to the current leading parameterizations and will help many applications that require one-to-one mapping

    Generating anatomical substructures for physically-based facial animation.

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    Physically-based facial animation techniques are capable of producing realistic facial deformations, but have failed to find meaningful use outside the academic community because they are notoriously difficult to create, reuse, and art-direct, in comparison to other methods of facial animation. This thesis addresses these shortcomings and presents a series of methods for automatically generating a skull, the superficial musculoaponeurotic system (SMAS – a layer of fascia investing and interlinking the mimic muscle system), and mimic muscles for any given 3D face model. This is done toward (the goal of) a production-viable framework or rig-builder for physically-based facial animation. This workflow consists of three major steps. First, a generic skull is fitted to a given head model using thin-plate splines computed from the correspondence between landmarks placed on both models. Second, the SMAS is constructed as a variational implicit or radial basis function surface in the interface between the head model and the generic skull fitted to it. Lastly, muscle fibres are generated as boundary-value straightest geodesics, connecting muscle attachment regions defined on the surface of the SMAS. Each step of this workflow is developed with speed, realism and reusability in mind

    MĂ©tamorphose de maillage 3D

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    Cette thèse de doctorat aborde spécifiquement le problème de la métamorphose entre différents maillages 3D, qui peut assurer un niveau élevé de qualité pour la séquence de transition, qui devrait être aussi lisse et progressive que possible, cohérente par rapport à la géométrie et la topologie, et visuellement agréable. Les différentes étapes impliquées dans le processus de transformation sont développées dans cette thèse. Nos premières contributions concernent deux approches différentes des paramétrisations: un algorithme de mappage barycentrique basé sur la préservation des rapports de longueur et une technique de paramétrisation sphérique, exploitant la courbure Gaussien. L'évaluation expérimentale, effectuées sur des modèles 3D de formes variées, démontré une amélioration considérable en termes de distorsion maillage pour les deux méthodes. Afin d aligner les caractéristiques des deux modèles d'entrée, nous avons considéré une technique de déformation basée sur la fonction radial CTPS C2a approprié pour déformer le mappage dans le domaine paramétrique et maintenir un mappage valide a travers le processus de mouvement. La dernière contribution consiste d une une nouvelle méthode qui construit un pseudo metamaillage qui évite l'exécution et le suivi des intersections d arêtes comme rencontrées dans l'état-of-the-art. En outre, notre méthode permet de réduire de manière drastique le nombre de sommets normalement nécessaires dans une structure supermesh. Le cadre générale de métamorphose a été intégré dans une application prototype de morphing qui permet à l'utilisateur d'opérer de façon interactive avec des modèles 3D et de contrôler chaque étape du processusThis Ph.D. thesis specifically deals with the issue of metamorphosis of 3D objects represented as 3D triangular meshes. The objective is to elaborate a complete 3D mesh morphing methodology which ensures high quality transition sequences, smooth and gradual, consistent with respect to both geometry and topology, and visually pleasant. Our first contributions concern the two different approaches of parameterization: a new barycentric mapping algorithm based on the preservation of the mesh length ratios, and a spherical parameterization technique, exploiting a Gaussian curvature criterion. The experimental evaluation, carried out on 3D models of various shapes, demonstrated a considerably improvement in terms of mesh distortion for both methods. In order to align the features of the two input models, we have considered a warping technique based on the CTPS C2a radial basis function suitable to deform the models embeddings in the parametric domain maintaining a valid mapping through the entire movement process. We show how this technique has to be adapted in order to warp meshes specified in the parametric domains. A final contribution consists of a novel algorithm for constructing a pseudo-metamesh that avoids the complex process of edge intersections encountered in the state-of-the-art. The obtained mesh structure is characterized by a small number of vertices and it is able to approximate both the source and target shapes. The entire mesh morphing framework has been integrated in an interactive application that allows the user to control and visualize all the stages of the morphing processEVRY-INT (912282302) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Generating anatomical substructures for physically-based facial animation

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    Physically-based facial animation techniques are capable of producing realistic facial deformations, but have failed to find meaningful use outside the academic community because they are notoriously difficult to create, reuse, and art-direct, in comparison to other methods of facial animation. This thesis addresses these shortcomings and presents a series of methods for automatically generating a skull, the superficial musculoaponeurotic system (SMAS – a layer of fascia investing and interlinking the mimic muscle system), and mimic muscles for any given 3D face model. This is done toward (the goal of) a production-viable framework or rig-builder for physically-based facial animation. This workflow consists of three major steps. First, a generic skull is fitted to a given head model using thin-plate splines computed from the correspondence between landmarks placed on both models. Second, the SMAS is constructed as a variational implicit or radial basis function surface in the interface between the head model and the generic skull fitted to it. Lastly, muscle fibres are generated as boundary-value straightest geodesics, connecting muscle attachment regions defined on the surface of the SMAS. Each step of this workflow is developed with speed, realism and reusability in mind.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo

    Generating anatomical substructures for physically-based facial animation

    Get PDF
    Physically-based facial animation techniques are capable of producing realistic facial deformations, but have failed to find meaningful use outside the academic community because they are notoriously difficult to create, reuse, and art-direct, in comparison to other methods of facial animation. This thesis addresses these shortcomings and presents a series of methods for automatically generating a skull, the superficial musculoaponeurotic system (SMAS – a layer of fascia investing and interlinking the mimic muscle system), and mimic muscles for any given 3D face model. This is done toward (the goal of) a production-viable framework or rig-builder for physically-based facial animation. This workflow consists of three major steps. First, a generic skull is fitted to a given head model using thin-plate splines computed from the correspondence between landmarks placed on both models. Second, the SMAS is constructed as a variational implicit or radial basis function surface in the interface between the head model and the generic skull fitted to it. Lastly, muscle fibres are generated as boundary-value straightest geodesics, connecting muscle attachment regions defined on the surface of the SMAS. Each step of this workflow is developed with speed, realism and reusability in mind.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo
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